Push to trial use of ecstasy in Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder treatment

A US-based psychedelic advocate is bankrolling an Australian push to start a medical trial using MDMA to treat sufferers of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).

Dr Rick Doblin wants Australia to replicate a successful trial in the United States in which 80 per cent of soldiers and emergency workers in a study were successfully treated for PTSD using MDMA, the main ingredient in ecstasy, and psychotherapy.

The controversial but legal program involved 20 veterans, who had not responded to other treatments, taking MDMA twice during three months of psychotherapy.

One of the participants in the study, former US army Sergeant Tony Macie has told the ABC's 7.30 program he was being crippled by memories of his 15-month deployment to Iraq.

He says he returned home constantly reliving an explosion that took the lives of two fellow soldiers.

"I would constantly be role playing, in my mind, events that happened and even though there's no way, but if I could have done something, if I could have changed it," Mr Macie said.

"Doing that led to anger, and a lot shorter temper and I would not like going out in public."

PTSD is often accompanied by depression, so I suffered from major depression and went through periods of being suicidal over a number of years

Steve McDonald

He says he was initially reluctant to join the trial but says taking the MDMA made him relaxed enough to face his traumatic memories and move on from the horrors of war.

"PTSD is often accompanied by depression, so I suffered from major depression and went through periods of being suicidal over a number of years," Mr McDonald said.

He says he believes a trial could help thousands of returned troops suffering from PTSD and will eventually get legal approval but, so far, no university is willing to partner it.

"There seems to be quite a social stigma around MDMA because it's an illicit drug, and obviously if someone's seen to be working with an illicit drug it potentially could impact on their professional reputation or perhaps the reputation of their institution," Mr McDonald said.

"And that, at the moment, appears to be our main obstacle in attracting somebody."

Mr McDonald served with the Chief of the Defence Force, General David Hurley, in Somalia and approached him directly to support a trial.

In a statement, Defence told 7.30 that General Health Command examined the published study in the US but the numbers involved were too small.